Core Memories
First Published July 2007
The Big Picture
PHOTO: Mark Richards
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One of the great achievements of the UNIVAC 1, the
world’s first commercial computer, was its mercury
delay-line memory, shown here. As J. Presper Eckert,
co-inventor of the UNIVAC, and four other members of
the Institute of Radio Engineers wrote in 1949: “In a
delay-line memory, information is stored in the form of
groups of electrical or acoustical impulses or signals
circulating in an electric delay line or medium
suitable for transmission of acoustic waves.”
The authors noted, “Although considerable research is
being done on electrostatic memories…the delay-line
type of memory is more highly developed at the present
time.” Of course, today essentially all memory is electrostatic.
The UNIVAC is just one of dozens of computers and
computing devices lovingly brought back to life in the
pages of Core Memory:
A Visual Survey of Vintage Computers,
a stunning coffee-table tome by Mark Richards
(photographs) and John Alderman (text), recently
published by Chronicle Books, San Francisco. For more
photos from the book, see http://spectrum.ieee.org/jul07/coreslides.